The Asus UL30A is a hardworking machine developed for hardworking people.

Revolutionary Ultra Low Voltage technology (ULV) paired with an exclusive Asus GraphiX Boost ensures the UL30A is capable of delivering up to nine hours of battery life without compromising performance.

The energy efficient Intel® Celeron Dual Core processor is also designed to save power. Together with the 3GB RAM, the UL30A will run smoothly, letting you open many files simultaneously, without the worry of stalling or crashing.

Lightweight at 1.7kg, and slim at less than 1 inch thick, the UL30A is designed to take anywhere. Its tasteful brushed aluminium finish makes it a classic, and an item you will be proud to show off at meetings or the local coffee shop.

The brand new Windows® 7 Home Premium operating system is installed, giving you the freedom to choose how you want your desktop to be organised and is also faster at finding the information you need.

Watch, play and record TV, view presentations and movies on the 13.3 inch LED active matrix TFT screen and, thanks to Altec Lansing® and SRS Premium Sound, you will have an all-round entertainment package that sounds great.

It also sports integrated WiFi cabability, three USB ports and a massive 320GB hard drive that is big enough to store over 100,000 photos!

Not only is the Asus UL30A a stylish and ultra-portable notebook, it is designed with users in mind. It features a multi-gesture touchpad so you can zoom in and out of pictures via pinching, or navigate up and down pages by sliding your finger.

At work or on the go, the Asus UL30A will keep you connected all day long.

Been this price for months, it only seems to be carphone that has this lower spec version in the UK. The other more expensive version is the Core2Duo one thats over £100 more expensive and almost certainly not worth the difference.

Can someone change the title? This is the Asus UL30A, not the UL30VT. Huge difference. The VT was more like £700, included both the Intel GMA 4500MHD found in this machine and NVidia's GT210M (with a button to switch between the two) and some overclocking stuff for the CPU. It's discontinued now, replaced by the VF, which is basically the same but has NVidia's Optimus technology meaning there's no longer a button to switch graphics chip, it's done automatically.